

It's odd that you think that I'm going out of my way to annoy them.and the day they ring and you are going out of your way to annoy them when they say to you, we are just ringing to let you know that someone in India is just about to make a withdrawal so just checking that it is you, we will authorise the withdrawal thank you for your time, bye and hangs up, you might want to re think that strategy.
You can answer a phone call if the phone is locked.Then why trust it for third factor ID?
You can answer a phone call if the phone is locked.
If it's not a call you were expecting them ask them to send you an email or tell you where you can find a number to call them back on.
Broadly similar to the type of questions they might ask and with a "probability" than its likely genuine more so than not. Not fool proof by a long shot but gives some reassurance though.What questions did you ask?
Broadly similar to the type of questions they might ask and with a "probability" than its likely genuine more so than not. Not fool proof by a long shot but gives some reassurance though.

Things like my middle name if I have one, the approx date I had the existing one (if I had actually had the one in front of me (which I did not) then I would have asked for every other letter on the ident number, date of commencement etc, things that they are more likely to know than not know if they were genuine, they usually allow around three questions to verify and would think of say 3 to verify them in return. I think it did initially irritate the caller but then came round to my way of thinking as a reasonable response and he saw the logic behind it, in other words he saw it from my point of view being as acceptable and reasonable as his organisations point of view.